June 24, 2026
5
min read

The Brand Campaign Incrementality Test Most Google Ads Accounts Skip


Alexander Perleman
, Head Of Product @ groas
Ex-Goldman Sachs and Stanford Computer Science

alex@groas.ai

LinkedIn

Most Google Ads accounts are wasting money on brand campaigns they have never properly tested. Brand campaign incrementality is the measure of whether your paid brand clicks actually drive conversions you would not have received through organic search alone. Without running a proper incrementality test, you are likely paying Google for traffic that was already yours for free.

The conventional wisdom says you should always run brand campaigns. Separate them, protect them, celebrate their incredible ROAS. But that sky-high ROAS is hiding something: a significant portion of those clicks were going to land on your site whether you paid for them or not. This article walks through how to actually test whether your Google Ads brand campaigns add value, three specific scenarios where they are a waste of budget, and two scenarios where brand term bidding is genuinely non-negotiable.

What Most People Believe: Always Separate Brand Campaigns From Everything Else

Why Practitioners Have Treated Brand Campaigns As Sacred

Every Google Ads best practice guide tells you the same thing: create a dedicated brand campaign, bid on your own name, and keep it separate from your non-brand search campaigns. The reasoning is sound on the surface. Brand campaigns produce the best ROAS numbers in your account. They give you control over the messaging when someone searches your name. They protect your real estate from competitors who might bid on your terms. And they keep branded query performance from inflating your non-brand campaign metrics, giving you a cleaner read on prospecting performance.

This advice is not wrong in principle. Segmentation matters. But somewhere along the way, the recommendation to segment brand campaigns turned into an unquestioned assumption that they are always worth running at full throttle.

The Incrementality Assumption Nobody Is Testing

Here is the gap. When someone searches for your brand name and clicks your ad, your reporting credits that conversion to the paid campaign. But if that person already knew your brand name, typed it into Google, and saw your organic listing sitting right there in position one, the question is: would they have clicked the organic result and converted anyway?

For most accounts, the answer is yes, at least for a meaningful percentage of those clicks. Yet almost nobody tests this. Brand campaigns are the one part of the account that gets a permanent pass from scrutiny because the ROAS looks phenomenal. That phenomenal ROAS is exactly the problem. It is so good that it discourages anyone from asking whether the spend is actually driving incremental results or just taking credit for organic conversions.

What The Data Actually Shows About Brand Campaign Incrementality

When Branded Search Clicks Are Truly Incremental

Brand campaign clicks are genuinely incremental when they capture traffic that would have gone somewhere other than your site. This happens in specific, identifiable situations: when a competitor is running ads on your brand terms and their ad appears above your organic listing, when your organic rank for your own brand name is weak (happens more often than you think with newer brands or common names), or when the searcher is in a comparison mindset and the ad copy can influence which direction they go.

In these scenarios, turning off brand campaigns means losing real clicks to competitors. The paid click is doing work that organic cannot do alone.

When You Are Paying For Clicks You Would Have Gotten Anyway

Outside of those scenarios, the picture changes. If you rank organically in position one for your brand name, no competitors are bidding on your terms, and the searcher already has clear intent to visit your site, the paid ad is simply cannibalizing the organic click. You pay Google for something you were going to get for free.

This is not speculation. Google's own research on search ads pause studies has shown that a meaningful share of paid clicks on brand terms shift to organic when ads are turned off, not lost entirely. The exact percentage varies by industry, brand strength, and competitive landscape, but the directional finding is consistent: brand campaigns overstate their incremental value in accounts with strong organic presence and no active competitor bidding.

The Competitor Scenario That Changes The Calculation

The variable that shifts this entire analysis is competitor activity. When competitors bid on your brand name, the math changes immediately. Their ad pushes your organic listing further down the page. On mobile, where screen real estate is even more limited, a competitor ad above your organic result can siphon meaningful click share. In this scenario, brand campaigns become defensive and genuinely incremental. But here is the key: you need to know whether this is actually happening in your account, not just assume it might be.

How To Actually Test Whether Your Brand Campaigns Add Value

The Geo-Split Test Setup That Takes Two Weeks

The most reliable way to test brand campaign incrementality is a geo-split test. Here is the setup:

Pick two sets of geographically similar markets. They should have comparable search volume, conversion rates, and demographic profiles. In the test group, pause your brand campaigns entirely. In the control group, keep them running as normal. Run the test for a minimum of two weeks, ideally four, to smooth out day-of-week and seasonal variance.

Monitor total conversions from both paid and organic in both groups, not just paid conversions. This is the critical piece. If your brand campaigns are truly incremental, the test group should see a meaningful drop in total conversions. If the test group's organic traffic picks up most or all of the slack, your brand campaigns are largely cannibalizing organic.

What Metrics To Look At (And Which Ones Lie)

The metric that lies is paid brand ROAS in isolation. It will always look incredible because branded queries have high intent and low CPCs. The metric that matters is total revenue (or total conversions) from all sources combined in the test versus control regions.

Also look at organic click-through rate changes in the test regions where brand ads are paused. If organic CTR jumps and total conversions hold steady, your brand ads were not adding value.

Ignore impression share changes on brand terms during the test. That metric is circular. Of course impression share drops when you pause the campaign. What matters is whether the revenue follows.

How To Interpret The Results Without Fooling Yourself

If total conversions in the test regions drop by less than 10-15% while you are saving 100% of your brand campaign spend, the brand campaign was not delivering incremental value proportional to its cost. If total conversions drop by more than 20%, especially if you can trace it to competitor ads appearing in the space you vacated, your brand campaign is earning its budget.

The honest version of this analysis requires combining paid and organic data, which means looking at Google Search Console alongside Google Ads reporting. Most account managers skip this step because it is inconvenient, and because the brand campaign numbers look so good they do not want to question them.

The Three Scenarios Where Brand Campaigns Are A Waste

High Organic Rank Plus No Competitor Bidding

If you rank in organic position one for your brand name, no competitors are running ads on your terms, and your site links dominate the SERP, paying for brand clicks is writing checks to Google for traffic you already own. Run the geo-split test described above. You will likely find that pausing brand campaigns shifts clicks to organic with minimal revenue impact.

Branded Queries With Zero Commercial Intent

Not all branded queries carry purchase intent. Searches like "[your brand] careers," "[your brand] login," or "[your brand] customer service" are navigational, not commercial. If your brand campaign is broadly capturing these queries, you are paying for clicks from people who had zero intent to buy and were going to find their way to your site regardless. At minimum, add these as negative keywords. Better yet, question whether the campaign structure is tight enough to justify the spend.

Brand Campaigns Inflating ROAS While Stealing Organic Credit

This is the most insidious scenario. Your brand campaign reports a 15:1 or 20:1 ROAS, which pulls up the blended ROAS of your entire account. This inflated number makes it harder to justify increasing spend on non-brand prospecting campaigns that have a 3:1 or 4:1 ROAS but are actually driving new customer acquisition. The brand campaign is not just wasting its own budget. It is distorting your view of the entire account and keeping you from allocating spend where it produces real growth.

The Two Scenarios Where Brand Campaigns Are Non-Negotiable

Active Competitor Conquesting On Your Brand Terms

If competitors are actively bidding on your brand name, brand campaigns move from optional to essential. Search the auction insights report for your brand terms. If you see competitors consistently showing ads on your brand queries, you need to be there. The cost of not bidding is real lost clicks to competitors, and those clicks have high intent because the searcher was looking for you specifically.

This is particularly acute in categories with aggressive direct competitors, comparison shopping behavior, or markets where switching costs are low. A competitor ad appearing above your organic listing on a mobile device can capture a meaningful share of clicks that would have been yours.

High-Value Brand Modifier Queries With Strong Purchase Intent

Brand modifier queries, like "[your brand] pricing," "[your brand] vs [competitor]," or "[your brand] demo," carry strong commercial intent. These searchers are actively evaluating whether to buy from you. Even if you rank organically for these terms, controlling the ad copy and landing page experience for these high-value queries is worth the spend. You can direct them to purpose-built landing pages, test specific messaging angles, and ensure competitors are not stealing the click at the moment of highest intent.

What This Means For Your Google Ads Budget Allocation

How To Free Up Budget For Prospecting Without Sacrificing Brand Defense

Run the incrementality test. If your brand campaigns are not delivering incremental conversions, reallocate that budget to non-brand prospecting campaigns where you are actually acquiring new customers. For most accounts, brand campaigns represent 10-30% of total spend. Freeing up even half of that for prospecting can meaningfully change your growth trajectory.

The key is not to go from full brand spend to zero overnight. Start with the geo-split test. Get data. Then reduce brand campaign budgets in markets where organic can hold the line, and keep brand defense active only where competitors are present.

The Hybrid Brand Strategy That Passes Incrementality Tests

The approach that consistently passes incrementality tests is a conditional brand strategy: bid on brand terms only when competitors are in the auction, and scale back when they are not. You can use automated rules or scripts to monitor auction insights and adjust brand campaign budgets based on competitor presence. This gives you the defensive benefit without paying a blanket tax on all branded clicks.

Pair this with tight negative keyword lists to exclude navigational and zero-intent brand queries, and make sure your conversion signals are clean enough that Smart Bidding is not over-indexing on brand conversions when setting bids across your account.

How groas Approaches Brand Campaign Decisions For DFY Clients

This is where most agencies and freelancers fall short. They set up brand campaigns on day one, see the great ROAS numbers, and never question whether the spend is incremental. It is the easiest line item to defend in a client report, which is exactly why it never gets challenged. The structure incentivizes the wrong behavior: agencies look better when blended ROAS is high, and brand campaigns inflate that number effortlessly. This is one of the structural problems with how traditional agencies and in-house teams operate at a ceiling.

groas takes a fundamentally different approach for DFY clients. The dedicated strategist runs incrementality tests on brand campaigns within the first few weeks of engagement. The proprietary engine, trained on over $500 billion in profitable ad spend, identifies where brand spend is cannibalizing organic and where it is genuinely defensive. Budget gets reallocated to prospecting campaigns that drive actual new customer acquisition, and brand defense stays active only where the data supports it.

Because groas operates on a month-to-month basis with $0 onboarding and no long-term contracts, there is no incentive to pad brand campaigns for the sake of inflated reporting. The strategist's job is to make the account more profitable, not to make a dashboard look good. Every decision, including the decision to scale back brand spend, is driven by whether it produces incremental revenue.

For accounts where competitor conquesting is active, groas builds dynamic brand defense strategies that respond to real-time auction conditions rather than running static brand campaigns at a fixed budget regardless of what is happening in the auction.

If you want someone to actually test whether your brand campaigns are worth running, and to reallocate that budget where it produces real growth, apply for DFY and let the groas team audit your brand spend on the first call.

Brand campaigns are not sacred. They are a line item that should justify its existence with incremental data, not legacy assumptions. Most accounts have never tested this, and most account managers have no incentive to. The result is a quiet, persistent leak of budget into clicks that would have happened for free, while prospecting campaigns that could drive real growth stay underfunded. Run the test. Follow the data. Stop paying for traffic you already own.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is Brand Campaign Incrementality In Google Ads?

Brand campaign incrementality measures whether paid clicks on your own brand terms drive conversions that would not have happened through organic search alone. If someone searches your brand name, sees both your ad and your organic listing, and would have clicked the organic result anyway, that paid click is not incremental. It is cannibalizing free traffic. Testing incrementality means comparing total conversions (paid plus organic) with brand ads on versus off, typically through a geo-split test, to determine whether the paid spend actually adds revenue or just takes credit for organic conversions.

How Do I Test Whether My Google Ads Brand Campaigns Are Worth It?

The most reliable method is a geo-split test. Select two comparable geographic regions with similar search volume and conversion rates. Pause brand campaigns in one region while keeping them active in the other. Run the test for two to four weeks. Compare total conversions from all sources, not just paid, between the two regions. If organic picks up most of the lost paid clicks and total revenue holds steady, your brand campaigns are not delivering incremental value. Look at combined paid and organic data using Google Ads alongside Google Search Console for accurate results.

Should I Always Bid On My Own Brand Name In Google Ads?

No. The answer depends on your specific competitive and organic landscape. If you rank in organic position one for your brand, no competitors bid on your terms, and your SERP presence is strong, brand campaigns may be wasting budget. However, if competitors actively run ads on your brand queries or your organic rank is weak, brand campaigns become essential. The correct approach is to test and let data decide rather than defaulting to always bidding. groas runs incrementality tests for DFY clients within the first weeks of engagement to answer this question with real data, not assumptions.

What Happens If I Pause My Brand Campaigns In Google Ads?

In many accounts, organic search absorbs most of the traffic that was previously going through paid brand ads. Total conversions may drop slightly or stay flat, depending on competitor activity and organic rank strength. The risk increases if competitors are actively bidding on your brand terms, because pausing your ads gives their ads more visibility. This is why a controlled geo-split test is preferable to simply pausing brand campaigns account-wide. You get data on the actual impact without exposing your entire account to risk.

How Much Budget Can I Save By Cutting Brand Campaigns?

Brand campaigns typically represent 10 to 30 percent of total Google Ads spend in most accounts. If an incrementality test shows that organic captures most brand clicks when ads are paused, you could reallocate a significant portion of that budget to non-brand prospecting campaigns that drive genuine new customer acquisition. The exact savings depend on your brand search volume, CPCs, and how much of your brand spend is truly incremental versus cannibalizing organic.

Why Do Agencies Keep Running Brand Campaigns Even When They Are Not Incremental?

Agencies benefit from high brand campaign ROAS because it inflates the blended account metrics they report to clients. A brand campaign showing 15:1 or 20:1 ROAS makes the overall account look better with minimal effort. There is a structural disincentive to question brand spend because doing so would lower the headline ROAS number. groas operates differently for DFY clients: with month-to-month contracts and no long-term lock-ins, the dedicated strategist has no incentive to pad metrics. Every dollar is evaluated for incremental contribution, including brand spend.

What Is The Difference Between Brand Campaigns And Non-Brand Campaigns?

Brand campaigns target searches that include your company or product name. Non-brand campaigns target generic or category-level keywords where the searcher may not know your brand. Brand campaigns typically have much higher click-through rates, lower CPCs, and better ROAS because the searcher already has intent to engage with your business. Non-brand campaigns are where new customer acquisition happens. The danger is letting strong brand metrics mask underinvestment in non-brand prospecting.

Can I Run Brand Campaigns Only When Competitors Are Bidding On My Terms?

Yes. This conditional brand strategy is the approach that consistently passes incrementality tests. You can monitor auction insights to detect competitor activity on your brand terms and use automated rules or scripts to activate brand campaigns only when competitors are present. This gives you defensive coverage without paying a blanket tax on every branded click. It requires more active management, which is one reason groas handles this dynamically for DFY clients using its proprietary engine to respond to real-time auction conditions.

Do Brand Campaigns Hurt Smart Bidding Performance?

Brand campaigns can distort Smart Bidding signals if branded and non-branded conversions are mixed or if brand conversion data dominates the signal the algorithm uses to set bids. The algorithm may over-index on easy brand conversions rather than optimizing for the harder, more valuable non-brand conversions. Keeping brand campaigns segmented is step one, but testing whether they should be running at all is step two. Clean conversion signals across your account are essential for Smart Bidding to work properly.

What Is A Good Brand Campaign ROAS In Google Ads?

Brand campaign ROAS numbers like 10:1, 15:1, or even 20:1 are common, but the number itself is misleading. High brand ROAS does not mean the campaign is performing well. It often means you are paying for high-intent clicks from people who already knew your brand and would have converted through organic search. The right question is not whether the ROAS is high but whether the conversions are incremental. A brand campaign with a 15:1 ROAS that delivers zero incremental conversions has a true incremental ROAS of zero.

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